Rosalind Nashashibi
2024
Remembering the chrysanthemums,
Seeking the chrysanthemums,
Planting the chrysanthemums,
Admiring the chrysanthemums,
Arranging the chrysanthemums,
Celebrating the chrysanthemums,
Painting the chrysanthemums,
Questioning the chrysanthemums,
Wearing the chrysanthemums,
The shadow of the chrysanthemums,
The dream of the chrysanthemums,
The death of the chrysanthemums.
2024
Oil on linen
Seeking the chrysanthemums,
Planting the chrysanthemums,
Admiring the chrysanthemums,
Arranging the chrysanthemums,
Celebrating the chrysanthemums,
Painting the chrysanthemums,
Questioning the chrysanthemums,
Wearing the chrysanthemums,
The shadow of the chrysanthemums,
The dream of the chrysanthemums,
The death of the chrysanthemums.
2024
Oil on linen
70 x 60 cm | 28 3/8 x 23 5/8 in
Series: Paintings
Further images
The lengthy title of this work by the painter and filmmaker Rosalind Nashashibi is derived from an ancient Chinese courtly game, in which players write a series of poems that...
The lengthy title of this work by the painter and filmmaker Rosalind Nashashibi is derived from an ancient Chinese courtly game, in which players write a series of poems that engage with the life cycle and human usages of chrysanthemums. These flowers are notable for blooming late in the year, for their incredibly slow rate of decay, and (relatedly) for their association with death. In several European countries, they are the only floral tributes welcome at funerals. Less solemnly, these cheap, hardy blooms also have a reputation as "gas station flowers"-a last-minute, distinctly perfunctory gift, purchased alongside a tank of fuel. While Nashashibi's still life channels the chrysanthemums famously painted by Henri Fantin-Latour and Vincent Van Gogh, it also asks us to consider how and why we humans use the mortal remains of another life form, cut flowers, to mark our own days, and our own inevitable deaths.
- Tom Morton, A Room Hung With Thoughts: British Painting Now. Green Family Art Foundation, Dallas, TX (US), 2025. pp. 82-83 (ill.).
- Tom Morton, A Room Hung With Thoughts: British Painting Now. Green Family Art Foundation, Dallas, TX (US), 2025. pp. 82-83 (ill.).
Exhibitions
- Rosalind Nashashibi: Stones, KM21, Kunstmuseum, The Hague (NL), November 29, 2025 – May 17, 2026- A Room Hung With Thoughts: British Painting Now, curated by Tom Morton, Green Family Art Foundation, Dallas, TX (US), February 15 - May 11, 2025
- TO DIE FOR, Rosalind Nashashibi and Elena Narbutaitė, GRIMM, Amsterdam (NL), 18 October – 23 November 2024